[QUOTE]Quantitative Easing ��SECRETS THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW..REVEALED! ��Quantitative easing has been sold to the general public as a panacea for all economic troubles. There's nothing that lower interest rates and a good shot of QE or quantitative easing can't cure, or so we're told. But does Quantitative easing work? Or is there a possibility it's making things worse? Has it ever occurred to the Fed that they maybe the arsonist and the fire fighter, as Jim Grant says, and quantitative easing is a fire house of gasoline? In this video we take a deep dive into what quantitative easing is, how it works, the different types of quantitative easing and how it could be destructive to our economy and society. It's troubling to think that the central bankers of the world have such an unjustifiable belief in their models that to them its totally inconceivable quantitative easing and lowering interest rates might not always be a cure all. Even more bizarre is the fact that 30 years ago, the central bankers themselves, would've thought todays quantitative easing and zero percent interest rate policies were complete madness. In this quantitative easing video, I'll specifically discuss the following:
1. How quantitative easing works.
2. The different types of quantitative easing. Japan, Europe, US.
3. How quantitative easing creates massive wealth inequality and how that, in turn, will most likely result in a societal decline. If you're interested in quantitative easing OR what the future holds for the economy this is a MUST WATCH VIDEO! RT video with Richard Werner:

ORIGINAL AIR DATE: MONDAY, JANUARY 26 Erin is joined by Richard Werner, director of international development and the founding director of the Centre for Banking, Finance and Sustainable Development at the University of Southampton. Richard talks to us about how central banks work and tells us how the term “quantitative easing,” which he coined in the early 1990s, has been wrongly interpreted and executed over the last decade. He also talks to us about the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing and gives us his take on wage growth and household debt levels. The credit easing that Ben Bernanke did in the first round of quantitative easing, qualitatively was closer to what Werner proposed when he first created the idea of quantitative easing in the early 1990s. But the other forms of QE will not increase credit growth because bank balance sheets are still encumbered. Richard believes a target for nominal growth would be an improvement over present central bank policy.

Quantitative Easing has a ��DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS CENTRAL BANKERS DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW! ��And that is sooner or later if you print too much money you'll invite hyperinflation to the table! And once the inflation genie is out of the bottle it can lead to hyperinflation. The dollar maybe the world reserve currency, but NO fiat currency is immune to the laws of supply and demand. And quantitative easing creates huge amounts of additional supply. QE is sold to the public is a cure all for the economy. There's nothing some money printing and quantitative easing can't handle but what about hyperinflation? The problem is quantitative easing is only one of two tools the central bank has, the other is lowering interest rates. But either is basically money printing. In other words, any problem the Fed try's to solve whether it's unemployment, housing crash, stock crash, 2% inflation, poverty, climate change, etc. they only have the money printing tool. And if you only have a money printing hammer, ever problem you see looks like a nail.

Quantitative easing is not a cure, it's makes the underlying ailment 10x worse. It really boils down to belief system. If you believe currency, in and of itself, creates consumption then QE or quantitative easing is you wonder drug. But if you think production creates consumption and currency is just a means of trading your production for someone else's production, then you should be extremely skeptical of quantitative easing. Because the core of quantitative easing is money printing many people believe that, because of QE infinity, sooner or later we'll see hyperinflation. But will we? This is the question I explore and answer in the video. In this quantitative easing video I discuss the following:
1. Quantitative easing as seen through the eyes of a central banker.
2. The BOE's quantitative easing explained in detail.
3 I answer the question "will quantitative easing cause hyperinflation?"